In Exodus, when parents were to consecrate their firstborn child, did they have to wait until they had a second child?
Or, even if he were an ONLY child would they be bound to the law?
[bibledrb]Exodus 13:2[/bibledrb]
Theyâd be bound. The consecration of the male child who âopened the wombâ was at 40 days after birth in the time of Christ.
Some people just seem to be caught up on the (false) idea that you canât have a âfirstâ if you donât have a second.
When I was expecting for the first

time I heard a lot of comments like,
âOh youâre expecting your FIRST childâ
âWhat are your plans for your FIRST childâ. . .
Etc. etc.
I didnât have people coming up saying,
âOh congratulations youâre expecting your only child!â
Now my sister, OTOH, had the same comments when she was expecting her first.
SHE had that child. . .and no others.
According to Rev Kev, even though I had my first child in exactly the same âwayâ, under the same circumstances, only my DAUGHTER can be called a âfirstbornâ because I had more children.
But my sister didnât HAVE a firstborn child, she had an ONLYborn child.
Strange, isnât it?
Whatâs even stranger is that under JEWISH law since my first child was a girl, and my second a boy, I didnât HAVE a âfirstborn SONâ.
But my sister, who had a son, and no others, didnât get a firstborn son (though under Jewish law she did). According to RevKev, she had an âonlyborn sonâ.